Update (Oct. 24, 4:10 p.m.): On Tuesday, Oscar-winning actress Julianne Moore tweeted that Toback had inappropriately approached her twice in the 1980s. The first time, he asked her to audition and come to his apartment. The second time was one month later and he used the “EXACT same language,” she wrote. He apparently did not remember that he had approached her once before.

The number of sexual misconduct accusations lobbed at director James Toback has exploded almost overnight. One day after the Los Angeles Times dropped a bombshell report noting that the Oscar-nominated filmmaker has been accused of sexual harassment and assault by 38 women, nearly 200 other women reached out to the Times to share their own experiences with the filmmaker. Though not all the accounts have been verified, they follow similar patterns; women say that Toback would approach them “on the streets of Manhattan, offering them the chance at a part in an upcoming movie, and a wide range of unwanted sexual advances and behavior,” per the Times. That devastating new figure—200 women—is evidence of the domino effect currently striking the entertainment industry in the wake of the Harvey Weinstein scandal, which has ushered in a new era of reckoning.

The Los Angeles Police Department has received numerous calls about Toback in the last few days, the Times reports. The Manhattan District Attorney’s office is also urging accusers to call its sex crimes hotline, as Toback currently lives in New York.

In addition, Today show anchor Natalie Morales added her name to the list of women who have allegedly been harassed by Toback, tweeting Monday that she faced the same treatment when she “encountered him near Central Park.”

In the initial Times piece, 31 women went on the record to describe their alleged experiences with Toback. Their stories and circumstances varied, but followed the same pattern of Toback rattling off his credentials (films like Black and White, starring Ben Stiller), then offering a potential job. That job, however, would hinge on a sexual favor.

“He told me he’d love nothing more than to masturbate while looking into my eyes,” Louise Post, guitarist and vocalist for the rock band Veruca Salt, said. Per the Times, encounters with Toback “often ended, according to many of the women interviewed, with Toback dry-humping them or masturbating in front of them, ejaculating into his pants or onto their bodies.”

His behavior was so common, according to drama teacher and playwright Karen Sklaire, that when a woman in the industry encountered a “creepy writer-director,” it was not unusual to reply, “‘Oh, no. You got Toback-ed.’ ”

After the story broke, other insiders began speaking out, such as Guardians of the Galaxy director James Gunn. In a lengthy Facebook post, he wrote that he has “despised James Toback for over 20 years” because he heard stories about his behavior.

“He has done this to three girls I’ve dated, two of my very best friends, and a family member . . . twice,” he wrote. “Yes, he came up to her twice with the same stupid line, not realizing she was the same person. This is in addition to many other women I've talked to at parties or dinners about their interactions with Toback.”

When reached by the Times for the initial story, Toback denied the allegations, “saying he had never met the women or, if he did, it ‘was for five minutes and have no recollection.’ ” He also said that due to his diabetes and heart condition, for the last 22 years, it has been “biologically impossible” for him to engage in this sort of alleged behavior. He declined to comment on the new allegations.

Million Dollar Baby

Clint Eastwood’s 2004 drama about an underdog boxer (played by Hillary Swank) and her trainer (Morgan Freeman) is the rare prestige sports film that managed to floor Academy voters. It picked up four Oscars that year, including one for Swank, one for Freeman, one for Eastwood, and the most coveted statuette of all: best picture.

Photo: From Warner Brothers/Everett Collection.

Bend It Like Beckham

A tomboy classic if there ever was one. Parminder Nagra plays Jess, a young British Indian girl who idolizes David Beckham, but must tone down her soccer obsession around her traditional parents. Bonus points for featuring a delightful cast that includes Archie Panjabi,Jonathan Rhys-Meyers, and Keira Knightley.

Photo: From Everett Collection.

Love and Basketball

Gina Prince-Bythewood’s 2000 romance was both a tribute to ambitious female athletes and an ode to childhood sweethearts. Sanaa Lathan plays the ambitious Monica, a basketball-obsessed hothead who slowly falls in love with Quincy (Omar Epps), her cocky next-door neighbor.

Photo: From New Line Cinema/Everett Collection.

Whip It

Drew Barrymore’s directorial debut was predictably idiosyncratic, and became a deeply underappreciated cult hit. The dramedy about a fearsome roller-derby league stars Ellen Page as a soft-spoken Texan who gets taken in by a cadre of ruthless women.

Photo: From Moviestore Collection Ltd/Alamy Stock Photo.

Bring It On

This isn’t a democracy, it’s a cheerocracy. Kirsten Dunst and Gabrielle Union play warring captains in this cheerleader comedy, which has since spawned a million terrible sequels.

Photo: From Everett Collection.

Girlfight

No one casts a vicious glare quite like Michelle Rodriguez in Girlfight. In 2000, the future Fast and Furious star played a wayward teen who turns to boxing, fine-tuning her character and knocking out sexist perception in this perfectly titled Karyn Kusama drama.

Photo: From Everett Collection.

A League of Their Own

Ah, the movie that taught us there’s no crying in baseball—though there is a magical quality to bringing stars like Rosie O’Donnell,Geena Davis,Madonna, and Tom Hanks together for a Penny Marshall flick about a World War II-era women’s baseball league.

Photo: From Columbia Pictures/Everett Collection.

Million Dollar Baby

Clint Eastwood’s 2004 drama about an underdog boxer (played by Hillary Swank) and her trainer (Morgan Freeman) is the rare prestige sports film that managed to floor Academy voters. It picked up four Oscars that year, including one for Swank, one for Freeman, one for Eastwood, and the most coveted statuette of all: best picture.

From Warner Brothers/Everett Collection.

Bend It Like Beckham

A tomboy classic if there ever was one. Parminder Nagra plays Jess, a young British Indian girl who idolizes David Beckham, but must tone down her soccer obsession around her traditional parents. Bonus points for featuring a delightful cast that includes Archie Panjabi,Jonathan Rhys-Meyers, and Keira Knightley.

From Everett Collection.

Love and Basketball

Gina Prince-Bythewood’s 2000 romance was both a tribute to ambitious female athletes and an ode to childhood sweethearts. Sanaa Lathan plays the ambitious Monica, a basketball-obsessed hothead who slowly falls in love with Quincy (Omar Epps), her cocky next-door neighbor.

From New Line Cinema/Everett Collection.

Whip It

Drew Barrymore’s directorial debut was predictably idiosyncratic, and became a deeply underappreciated cult hit. The dramedy about a fearsome roller-derby league stars Ellen Page as a soft-spoken Texan who gets taken in by a cadre of ruthless women.

From Moviestore Collection Ltd/Alamy Stock Photo.

The Fits

The quiet indie drama about a young girl (newcomer Royalty Hightower, a too-good-to-be-true movie star name) who aspires to be both a boxer and a dancer, is a powerful meditation on youth and aspiration, tossing in a jagged, surreal subplot about dancers coming down with mysterious seizures.

By Paul Yes/Oscilloscope Laboratories/Everett Collection.

Personal Best

The 1982 Mariel Hemingway vehicle centered on a pair of track stars left hanging when the United States pulled itself out of that year’s Olympics. Hemingway plays Chris, an ambitious young athlete who gets romantically involved with an older track star named Tory (played by real-life athlete Patrice Donnelly).

From Everett Collection.

Bring It On

This isn’t a democracy, it’s a cheerocracy. Kirsten Dunst and Gabrielle Union play warring captains in this cheerleader comedy, which has since spawned a million terrible sequels.

From Everett Collection.

Girlfight

No one casts a vicious glare quite like Michelle Rodriguez in Girlfight. In 2000, the future Fast and Furious star played a wayward teen who turns to boxing, fine-tuning her character and knocking out sexist perception in this perfectly titled Karyn Kusama drama.

From Everett Collection.

A League of Their Own

Ah, the movie that taught us there’s no crying in baseball—though there is a magical quality to bringing stars like Rosie O’Donnell,Geena Davis,Madonna, and Tom Hanks together for a Penny Marshall flick about a World War II-era women’s baseball league.